South Australian Defence Industries Minister Martin Hamilton-Smith said South Australia and the ACT would present a joint position paper at tomorrow’s Council of Australian Government’s Industry and Skills Council (CISC) to further pressure the Australian Government to establish a Space Agency.

“Similar to the defence industry, the space sector will deliver opportunities for manufacturers and service providers to transition to a high technology, high growth sector,” said Hamilton-Smith.

The Australian space sector currently produces annual revenues of up to 4 billion and employs between 9,500 and 11,500 people from its 0.8 per cent share of the global space economy, which is estimated to be worth $420 billion.

The Australian Government announced in July it was forming a committee to review the need for a Space Agency but space industry experts were hoping the agency would be announced during the upcoming 68th International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Adelaide in September.

More than 3500 delegates from around the world will attend the conference, including space entrepreneur Elon Musk.

Space Industry Association of Australia secretary Peter Nikoloff said the long process of attracting the IAC to Australia had already lifted the profile of space within government.

“The state government in South Australia is certainly pushing hard. They see the economy in South Australia as part of the hi-tech economy and space has a role to play in that,” he said.

South Australia has a long history in the space industry, which started when the Woomera Test Range was established 70 years ago in 1947 about 450km north of Adelaide.

The outback range is still used and last year launched an experimental rocket flight, pictured below, as part of a joint research program, HIFiRE (Hypersonic International Flight Research Experimentation Program).

HIFiRE 5b rocket launches successfully at the Woomera Test Range in South Australia on May 18, 2016.

In October 2016, South Australia and the Agenzia Spaziale Italiana (ASI) agreed to jointly pursue space-related industries.

There are at least 60 South Australian organisations with space-related expertise and 11 local space start-ups, including Myriota, Fleet Space Technologies, Inovor Technologies and Neumann Space.

Neumann Space founder Patrick Neumann said South Australia could already have its own space agency.

“Just like NASA, who don’t actually build any space shuttles and actually put that job out to tender, South Australia can do that. We have Lockheed Martin, BAE and now Boeing.”

“What we need is leadership, that authoritative body to string it all together.”

“Adelaide’s manufacturing capabilities also have it best placed to house the agency as opposed to other cities and the operational headquarters can run out here with the institutional headquarters better suited for Canberra.”

Martin Hamilton-Smith said South Australia was leading the way in the development of Australia’s space economy.

“Our vision is to position South Australia as a vibrant hub for future space activity and industry development,” he said.

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